Mayor of Manila#Vice Mayor
{{short description|Local chief executive of Manila, Philippines}}
{{about|the Mayor of Manila proper|a list of mayors of places in Metro Manila|List of mayors of Metro Manila}}
{{Use Philippine English|date=March 2023}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2023}}
{{Infobox Political post
| post = Mayor
| body = Manila
| insignia = Ph seal ncr manila.svg
| insigniasize = 120px
| insigniacaption = Seal of the City of Manila
| native_name = {{small|Punong Lungsod ng Maynila}}
| image = Honey Lacuna profile (cropped).jpg
| incumbent = Honey Lacuna Pangan
| incumbentsince = June 30, 2022
| style = The Honorable (Formal)
| residence =
| seat = Manila City Hall, Ermita
| appointer = Elected via popular vote
| termlength = 4 years, not eligible for re-election immediately after three consecutive terms
| formation = 1901
| succession =
| inaugural = Arsenio Cruz Herrera
| website = [http://www.manila.gov.ph/mayor/ Lungsod ng Maynila]
}}
The City Mayor of Manila ({{langx|fil|Punong Lungsod ng Maynila}}, sometimes referred to as, Alkalde ng Maynila) is the head of the executive branch of Manila's city government. The mayor holds office at Manila City Hall. Like all local government heads in the Philippines, the mayor is elected via popular vote, and may not be elected for a fourth consecutive term (although the former mayor may return to office after an interval of one term). In case of death, resignation or incapacity, the vice mayor becomes the mayor.
History
Prior to the arrival of Miguel López de Legazpi, Manila was a chiefdom headed by datus. From the defeat of Rajah Sulayman's forces in 1575 to the passage of the Maura Law in 1895, the chief executive of the city was appointed by the Spanish government to a person of Spanish descent. The highest position a Filipino was able to hold was the cabeza de barangay. With the passage of the Maura Law, the office of capitan municipal was established, with the people electing their own town heads, although the Spanish retained considerable influence and could veto decisions.
With the eruption of the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine–American War, the position reverted to an appointive head. With the advent of World War II, President Manuel L. Quezon appointed Jorge B. Vargas as mayor of the City of Greater Manila (forerunner of Metro Manila) in 1941. With the liberation of Manila in 1945 by combined Filipino and American soldiers under the United States Army and the Philippine Commonwealth Army including local recognized guerrillas against the Japanese Imperial forces, the earlier setup was used once again.
With the amendment of the city's charter in 1951, the position became an elective post. The first mayoral election was in 1951, and Manila's congressman from the 2nd district Arsenio Lacson defeated incumbent Manuel de la Fuente. A few years after the declaration of martial law by President Ferdinand Marcos, Manila and nearby cities like Quezon City, Caloocan, and Pasay, were overshadowed by the office of the governor of the newly created Metro Manila, whom Marcos appointed his wife, Imelda Marcos, to the position.
With Arsenio Lacson becoming the first elected mayor, the city of Manila underwent The Golden Age,{{Harvnb|Hancock|2000|p=16}} was revitalized, and once again became the "Pearl of the Orient", a moniker it earned before the outbreak of the war.{{Citation needed|date=January 2014}} After Mayor Lacson's term in the 1950s, the city was led by Mayor Antonio Villegas during most of the 1960s, and Mayor Ramon Bagatsing for nearly the entire decade of the 1970s until the 1986 People Power Revolution that overthrew President Marcos.
Mayors Lacson, Villegas, and Bagatsing are often collectively considered as "the Big Three of Manila" for their rather long tenures as the city hall's chief executive (continuously for over three decades, from 1952 to 1986), but more importantly, for their indelible contribution to the development and progress of the city and their lasting legacy in uplifting the quality of life and welfare of the people of Manila.
With the ouster of Marcos following the People Power Revolution, President Corazon Aquino vacated all local executive officials and appointed officers in charge (OICs) in their place; she appointed party-mate Mel Lopez as OIC of Manila. Local elections were held in 1988, and Lopez was elected as mayor. The Local Government Code was enacted in 1991, and standardized the powers of Manila's mayor making it at par with other cities in the country.
The office of the mayor is often used as a springboard for further political ambitions. In 1961, Lacson bolted the Nacionalista Party to become the campaign manager of the Liberal Party's Diosdado Macapagal's presidential campaign. After Macapagal's victory, Lacson returned with the Nacionalistas and became a critic of the Macapagal administration. Lacson would've been likely the Nacionalista's candidate for the presidency in 1965, had not death intervened in 1962.{{Cite news |date=April 16, 1962 |title=Arsenio Lacson of Manila Dead |page=29 |work=New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1962/04/16/archives/arsenio-lacson-of-manila-dead-3time-mayor-was-director-of-macapagal.html |url-access=subscription |access-date=February 2, 2008 |quote=Mr. Lacson had returned to the Nacionalista party, now in opposition, and was considered likely to be its Presidential candidate in 1965}} In 1998, the sitting mayor of Manila, Alfredo Lim, did run as the Liberal Party's candidate for the presidency, but was beaten by Joseph Estrada, finishing fifth in a field of ten candidates, garnering 9% of the vote; Estrada later nominated him as Secretary of the Interior and Local Government. Lim later ran and won a Senate seat in 2004, but forfeited it three years when he ran and won as mayor again.{{Cite web |title=Former Manila Mayor Alfredo Lim Dies |url=https://www.rappler.com/nation/former-manila-mayor-alfredo-lim-dies |access-date=September 21, 2021 |website=Rappler |date=August 8, 2020 |language=en}} Estrada, who was previously the mayor of bordering San Juan, defeated Lim as mayor of Manila in 2013. Their vice mayor, Isko Moreno, ran for the Senate and lost in 2016. Moreno defeated both Estrada and Lim in 2019. In 2021, Moreno announced his candidacy for president in the 2022 presidential election.{{Cite web |last=Lalu |first=Gabriel Pabico |date=September 21, 2021 |title=Isko Moreno to Run for President in 2022; Formal Announcement Sept 22 |url=https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1490954/isko-moreno-to-run-for-president-in-2022-formal-announcement-on-sept-22 |access-date=September 21, 2021 |website=Inquirer.net |language=en}} Days later, Moreno's opponent Manny Pacquiao chose former mayor Lito Atienza as his running mate for vice president.{{Cite web |last=Maru |first=Davinci |date=October 1, 2021 |title=Lito Atienza Files COC as Pacquiao's VP for 2022 |url=https://news.abs-cbn.com/news/10/01/21/lito-atienza-files-coc-as-pacquiaos-vp-for-2022 |access-date=October 4, 2021 |website=ABS-CBN News |language=en}} Moreno, Atienza, and Pacquiao both lost their bids in 2022, respectively.
The longest-serving mayor of Manila is Ramon Bagatsing, who continuously served as the city's chief executive from 1971 until 1986. His tenure could have been longer if his term was not disrupted by the forced resignation of all local government unit heads and the appointment of officers in charge in their place after the 1986 revolution, to which Bagatsing fully supported and complied with, voluntarily handing over his position to OIC Mel Lopez.
List
class="wikitable" | ||||
{{Abbr|No.|Number}}
!Image !Name of mayor | colspan="2" |Party
!Term | Start of term | End of term | Name of Vice mayor |
---|---|---|---|---|
colspan="9" |Appointive position (1901–1951) | ||||
1
| style="background-color:Green;"| | rowspan="22" |N/A | August 7, 1901 | September 18, 1905{{Efn|Resigned from office|name=resigned}}
| rowspan="2" |Ramón Fernández | ||
rowspan="3" |2
| rowspan="3" |100px | rowspan="3" |Félix M. Roxas | rowspan="3" style="background-color:Green;"| | rowspan="3"| Federalista | rowspan="3" |September 19, 1905 | rowspan="3" |January 15, 1917 |
Ramón Fernández Isabelo de los Reyes Justo Lukban Pablo Ocampo | ||||
rowspan="2" |Pablo Ocampo | ||||
3
| style="background-color:#FF91A4;"| | Liga Popular | January 16, 1917 | March 6, 1920{{Efn|name=resigned}} | ||||
4
| style="background-color:#1C1CF0;"| | March 7, 1920 | July 16, 1923{{Efn|name=resigned}}
| rowspan="2" |Juan Posadas Jr. | ||
5
| style="background-color:#1C1CF0;"| |July 17, 1923 | February 8, 1924{{Efn|name=resigned}} | |||
6
|Miguel Romuáldez | {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} |February 9, 1924 | August 31, 1927
|Tomás Earnshaw | |||
rowspan="3" |7
| rowspan="3" |100px | rowspan="3" |Tomás Earnshaw | rowspan="3" style="background:{{Party color|Nacionalista Party}};"| | rowspan="3" |Nacionalista | rowspan="3" |September 1, 1927 | rowspan="3" |December 31, 1933 | ||||
Juan Posadas Jr. Isabelo de los Reyes Jorge B. Vargas | ||||
rowspan="2" |Jorge B. Vargas | ||||
8
| Juan Posadas Jr. | {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} | January 1, 1934 | January 4, 1940{{Efn|Died in office|name=died}} | ||||
(5)
| {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} |January 5, 1940 | August 28, 1941 | |||
9
| {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} |August 29, 1941 | December 23, 1941
| rowspan="4" |Hermenegildo Atienza | |||
rowspan="2" |10
| rowspan="2" |100px | rowspan="2" |Jorge B. Vargas | {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} | rowspan="2" |December 24, 1941 | rowspan="2" |January 26, 1942 | ||||
{{party name with colour|KALIBAPI}} | ||||
11
| {{party name with colour|KALIBAPI}} |January 27, 1942 | July 17, 1944 | |||
12
| {{party name with colour|KALIBAPI}} |July 18, 1944 | July 18, 1945
| rowspan="3" |Carmen Planas | |||
(9)
| {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} |July 19, 1945 | June 6, 1946 | |||
13
|Valeriano E. Fugoso Sr. | {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |June 7, 1946 | December 31, 1947 | |||
rowspan="2" |14
| rowspan="2" |100px | rowspan="2" |Manuel de la Fuente | rowspan="3" bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party (Philippines)}}" | | rowspan="2" |Liberal
| rowspan="2" |January 1, 1948 | rowspan="2" |December 31, 1951 | |||
rowspan="1" |Iñigo Ed. Regalado | ||||
colspan="10" |Elective position (1952–present) | ||||
rowspan="3" |15
| rowspan="3" |100px | rowspan="3" | Arsenio Lacson Sr. | rowspan="3" bgcolor="{{party color|Nacionalista Party}}" | | rowspan="3" | Nacionalista
|1952 | rowspan="3" | January 1, 1952 | rowspan="3" | April 15, 1962{{Efn|name=died}}
| rowspan="2" |Jesus Marcos Roces | |
1955 | ||||
rowspan="2" |1959 | ||||
rowspan="6" |16
| rowspan="6" |100px | rowspan="6" |Antonio Villegas | rowspan="6" bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party (Philippines)}}" | | rowspan="6" |Liberal
| rowspan="6" |April 16, 1962 | rowspan="6" |December 31, 1971
| rowspan="2" |Herminio A. Astorga | ||
1963 | ||||
rowspan="4" |1967
|Felicisimo Cabigao | ||||
Atty. Ernesto Maceda Sr. | ||||
Atty. Danilo B. Lacuna Sr. | ||||
Atty. Mel Lopez | ||||
rowspan="3" |17
| rowspan="3" |100px | rowspan="3" |Ramon Bagatsing | rowspan="2" bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party (Philippines)}}" | | rowspan="2" |Liberal | rowspan="2" |1971 | rowspan="3" |January 1, 1972 | rowspan="3" |March 26, 1986{{Efn|At this time, after the 1986 EDSA Revolution, President Corazon Aquino forced the resignation of all local government unit heads and appointed officers in charge in their place.|name=}} | Martin B. Isidro Sr. | ||||
rowspan="2" |James Barbers | ||||
{{party name with colour|Kilusang Bagong Lipunan}}
| rowspan="4" |1980 | ||||
rowspan="2" | 18
| rowspan="2" |100px | rowspan="2" |Mel Lopez{{Efn|Officer-in-charge|name=oic}} | {{party name with colour|United Nationalist Democratic Organization}} | rowspan="2" |March 26, 1986 | rowspan="2" |December 1, 1987
|Bambi M. Ocampo | |||
{{party name with colour|Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan}}
| rowspan="2" |Ernesto A. Nieva | ||||
19
| Gregorio Ejercito{{Efn|name=oic}} | {{party name with colour|N/A}} |December 2, 1987 | February 2, 1988 | |||
rowspan="3" |(18)
| rowspan="3" |100px | rowspan="3" |Mel Lopez | {{party name with colour|Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan}} | rowspan="3" |1988 | rowspan="3" | February 3, 1988 | rowspan="3" |June 30, 1992
| rowspan="2" |Danilo Lacuna | |||
{{party name with colour|Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino}} | ||||
{{party name with colour|Lakas-NUCD}}
|Ernesto Maceda Jr. | ||||
rowspan="2" |20
| rowspan="2" | | rowspan="2" |Alfredo Lim | {{Party name with colour|People's Reform Party}} |1992 | rowspan="2" |June 30, 1992 | rowspan="2" |March 27, 1998{{Efn|Resigned from office|name=resigned}}
| rowspan="2" |Lito Atienza | ||
bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party (Philippines)}}" |
| rowspan="3" |1995 | ||||
rowspan="5" |21
| rowspan="5" |100px | rowspan="5" |Lito Atienza | rowspan="5" bgcolor="{{party color|Liberal Party (Philippines)}}" | | rowspan="5" |Liberal | rowspan="5" |March 27, 1998 | rowspan="5" |June 30, 2007 |Ernesto A. Nieva | ||||
Larry Silva | ||||
1998
| rowspan="3" |Danilo Lacuna | ||||
2001 | ||||
2004 | ||||
rowspan="2" |(20)
| rowspan="2" | | rowspan="2" |Alfredo Lim | {{party name with colour|Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino}} |2007 | rowspan="2" |June 30, 2007 | rowspan="2" |June 30, 2013
| rowspan="3" |Isko Moreno | |||
{{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}}
| 2010 | ||||
rowspan="2" |22
| rowspan="2" |100px | rowspan="2" |Joseph Estrada | {{party name with colour|United Nationalist Alliance}} |2013 | rowspan="2" | June 30, 2013 | rowspan="2" | June 30, 2019 | |||
{{party name with colour|Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino}}
|2016 | rowspan="2" | Honey Lacuna Pangan | ||||
23
| {{party name with colour|Asenso Manileño}} |2019 |June 30, 2019 |June 30, 2022 | ||||
24
| {{party name with colour|Asenso Manileño}} | 2022 | June 30, 2022 | Incumbent |
= Timeline =
{{#tag:timeline|
ImageSize = width:900 height:auto barincrement:12
PlotArea = top:10 bottom:90 right:130 left:20
AlignBars = late
Define $today = {{#time:m/d/Y}}
Colors =
id:KBL value:red legend:KBL
id:PMP value:redorange legend:PMP
id:PRP value:pink legend:PRP
id:Lakas value:skyblue legend:Lakas–Kampi–CMD/Lakas–NUCD
id:LP value:dullyellow legend:Liberal
id:NP value:yellowgreen legend:Nacionalista
id:UNIDO value:yellow legend:UNIDO
id:Asenso value:darkblue legend:Asenso
id:Ind value:gray(0.8) legend:Non-partisan
id:linemark value:gray(0.8)
id:linemark2 value:gray(0.9)
DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy
Period = from:01/01/1952 till:$today
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:1952
ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:4 start:1952 grid:linemark2
Legend = columns:3 left:150 top:65 columnwidth:200
TextData =
pos:(25,65) textcolor:black fontsize:M
text:"Political parties:"
BarData =
Barset:First
Barset:Lim1
Barset:Second
PlotData=
width:5 align:left fontsize:9 shift:(5,-4) anchor:till
barset:First
from:01/01/1952 till:04/15/1962 text:"Arsenio Lacson" color:NP
from:04/15/1962 till:12/31/1971 text:"Antonio Villegas" color:LP
from:01/01/1972 till:03/26/1986 text:"Ramon Bagatsing" color:KBL
from:03/26/1986 till:12/01/1987 text:"Mel Lopez" color:UNIDO
from:12/02/1987 till:02/02/1988 text:"Gregorio Ejercito" color:Ind
from:02/03/1988 till:06/30/1992 text:"Mel Lopez" color:Lakas
barset:Lim1
from:06/30/1992 till:03/27/1998 color:PRP
barset:break
from:01/01/1998 till:03/27/1998 text:"Alfredo Lim" color:LP
barset:Second
from:03/27/1998 till:06/30/2007 text:"Lito Atienza" color:LP
from:06/30/2007 till:06/30/2013 text:"Alfredo Lim" color:LP
from:06/30/2013 till:06/30/2019 text:"Joseph Estrada" color:PMP
from:06/30/2019 till:06/30/2022 text:"Isko Moreno" color:Asenso
from:06/30/2022 till:end text:"Honey Lacuna" color:Asenso
}}
= Notes =
{{Notelist}}
{{anchor|vice}}Vice mayor
The vice mayor is the second-highest official of the city. The vice mayor is elected via popular vote; although most mayoral candidates have running mates, the vice mayor is elected separately from the mayor. This can result in the mayor and the vice mayor coming from different political parties.
The vice mayor is the presiding officer of the Manila City Council, although they can only vote as the tiebreaker. When a mayor is removed from office, the vice mayor becomes the mayor until the scheduled next election.
class="wikitable" | |
#
! Name ! Image | colspan="2" |Party
! Start of term ! End of term |
---|---|
colspan="7" |Appointive position (1901–1951) | |
1
| {{party name with color|Nacionalista Party}} |August 7, 1901 |August 7, 1907 | |
2
| {{party name with color|Nacionalista Party}} |August 7, 1907 |August 7, 1911 | |
3
| style="background-color:#FF91A4;"| | Liga Popular |August 8, 1911 |August 8, 1915 | |
4
| {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} |August 8, 1915 |March 6, 1920 | |
5
|Juan Posadas Jr. | | |March 7, 1920 |February 8, 1924 | |
6
|Tomás Earnshaw | | |February 9, 1924 |August 31, 1927 | |
(5)
|Juan Posadas Jr. | | |September 1, 1927 |December 31, 1929 | |
(2)
|{{party name with color|Nacionalista Party}} |January 1, 1930 |December 31, 1931 | |
7
|{{party name with color|Nacionalista Party}} |January 1, 1932 |January 4, 1940 | |
8
| |Young Philippines |January 5, 1940 |August 28, 1941 | |
9
|{{party name with color|Nacionalista Party}} |August 29, 1941 |July 17, 1944 | |
(8)
| | Young Philippines |July 18, 1944 |December 31, 1949 | |
10
| | |January 1, 1950 |December 31, 1951 | |
colspan="7" |Elective position (1952–present) | |
11
| |Bartolome Gatmaitan | | |January 1, 1952 |December 31, 1955 | |
12
| |Jesus M. R. Roces | | |January 1, 1956 |December 30, 1959 | |
13
| {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |December 30, 1959 |April 15, 1962 | |
14
| | {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |April 16, 1962 |December 31, 1967 | |
15
| |Felicisimo R. Cabigao | | |January 1, 1968 |December 31, 1969 | |
16
| | {{party name with colour|Nacionalista Party}} |January 1, 1970 |August 31, 1970 | |
17
| | {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |September 1, 1970 |April 30, 1971 | |
18
| {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |May 1, 1971 |December 31, 1971 | |
19
|Atty. Martin B. Isidro Sr. | {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |January 1, 1972 |December 31, 1977 | |
20
| | {{party name with colour|Kilusang Bagong Lipunan}} |January 1, 1978 |March 26, 1986 | |
21
| |Bambi M. Ocampo | | |March 26, 1986 |April 27, 1987 | |
22
|Ernesto A. Nieva | | |April 28, 1987 |February 2, 1988 | |
(17)
| | {{party name with colour|PDP–Laban}} |February 3, 1988 |January 31, 1992 | |
23
| |Ernesto V.P. Maceda Jr. | {{party name with colour|Nationalist People's Coalition}} |February 1, 1992 |June 30, 1992 | |
24
| {{party name with colour|People's Reform Party}} |June 30, 1992 |March 27, 1998 | |
(22)
|Ernesto A. Nieva | {{party name with colour|Liberal Party (Philippines)}} |March 27, 1998 |March 28, 1998 | |
25
| | {{party name with colour|Lakas–CMD (1991)}} |March 28, 1998 |June 30, 1998 | |
rowspan="3" |(17)
| rowspan="3" | | rowspan="3" |Atty. Danilo B. Lacuna Sr. | {{party name with colour|Laban ng Makabayang Masang Pilipino}} | rowspan="3" |June 30, 1998 | rowspan="3" |June 30, 2007 | |
{{party name with colour|PDP–Laban}} | |
{{party name with colour|Asenso Manileño}} | |
26
| {{party name with colour|Asenso Manileño}} |June 30, 2007 |June 30, 2016 | |
27
|Dra. Maria Sheilah Lacuna–Pangan | {{party name with colour|Asenso Manileño}} | June 30, 2016
|June 30, 2022 |
28
| | {{party name with colour|Asenso Manileño}} |June 30, 2022 |June 30, 2025 | |
29
| |Chi Atienza | {{party name with colour|Aksyon Demokratiko}} |June 30, 2025 (Assuming Office) |June 30, 2028 |
Elections
File:Manila City Hall top view (Padre Burgos, Manila; 02-10-2022).jpg.]]
- 1951 Manila mayoral election
- 1955 Manila mayoral election
- 1959 Manila mayoral election
- 1963 Manila mayoral election
- 1967 Manila mayoral election
- 1971 Manila mayoral election
- 1980 Manila mayoral election
- 1988 Manila local elections
- 1992 Manila local elections
- 1995 Manila local elections
- 1998 Manila local elections
- 2001 Manila local elections
- 2004 Manila local elections
- 2007 Manila local elections
- 2010 Manila local elections
- 2013 Manila local elections
- 2016 Manila local elections
- 2019 Manila local elections
- 2022 Manila local elections
- 2025 Manila local elections
See also
- Gobernadorcillo
- Cabeza de Barangay
- Legislative districts of Manila. representation in the House of Representatives
- Manila City Council
References
{{reflist}}
=Works cited=
- {{Cite news |last=Hancock |first=Rose |date=April 2000 |title=April Was a Cruel Month for the Greatest Manila Mayor Ever Had |periodical=1898:The Shaping of Philippine History |volume=II |series=35 |publication-place=Manila |publisher=Asia Pacific Communications Network, Inc. |pages=15–20}}
{{Manila}}
{{Mayors of Manila}}